“Dearest,” said the little
princess after breakfast on the morning of the nineteenth
March, and her downy little lip rose from old habit,
but as sorrow was manifest in every smile, the sound
of every word, and even every footstep in that house
since the terrible news had come, so now the smile
of the little princess—influenced by the
general mood though without knowing its cause—was
such as to remind one still more of the general sorrow.
“Dearest, I’m afraid this
morning’s fruschtique*—as Foka the
cook calls it—has disagreed with me.”
Fruhstuck: breakfast.
“What is the matter with you,
my darling? You look pale. Oh, you are very
pale!” said Princess Mary in alarm, running with
her soft, ponderous steps up to her sister-in-law.
“Your excellency, should not
Mary Bogdanovna be sent for?” said one of the
maids who was present. (Mary Bogdanovna was a midwife
from the neighboring town, who had been at Bald Hills
for the last fortnight.)
“Oh yes,” assented Princess
Mary, “perhaps that’s it. I’ll
go. Courage, my angel.” She kissed
Lise and was about to leave the room.
“Oh, no, no!” And besides
the pallor and the physical suffering on the little
princess’ face, an expression of childish fear
of inevitable pain showed itself.
“No, it’s only indigestion?...
Say it’s only indigestion, say so, Mary!
Say…” And the little princess began to
cry capriciously like a suffering child and to wring
her little hands even with some affectation.
Princess Mary ran out of the room to fetch Mary Bogdanovna.
“Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu!
Oh!” she heard as she left the room.
The midwife was already on her way
to meet her, rubbing her small, plump white hands
with an air of calm importance.
“Mary Bogdanovna, I think it’s
beginning!” said Princess Mary looking at the
midwife with wide-open eyes of alarm.
“Well, the Lord be thanked,
Princess,” said Mary Bogdanovna, not hastening
her steps. “You young ladies should not
know anything about it.”
“But how is it the doctor from
Moscow is not here yet?” said the princess.
(In accordance with Lise’s and Prince Andrew’s
wishes they had sent in good time to Moscow for a
doctor and were expecting him at any moment.)
“No matter, Princess, don’t
be alarmed,” said Mary Bogdanovna. “We’ll
manage very well without a doctor.”
Five minutes later Princess Mary from
her room heard something heavy being carried by.
She looked out. The men servants were carrying
the large leather sofa from Prince Andrew’s
study into the bedroom. On their faces was a
quiet and solemn look.
Princess Mary sat alone in her room
listening to the sounds in the house, now and then
opening her door when someone passed and watching
what was going on in the passage. Some women passing
with quiet steps in and out of the bedroom glanced
at the princess and turned away. She did not
venture to ask any questions, and shut the door again,
now sitting down in her easy chair, now taking her
prayer book, now kneeling before the icon stand.
To her surprise and distress she found that her prayers
did not calm her excitement. Suddenly her door
opened softly and her old nurse, Praskovya Savishna,
who hardly ever came to that room as the old prince
had forbidden it, appeared on the threshold with a
shawl round her head.
“I’ve come to sit with
you a bit, Masha,” said the nurse, “and
here I’ve brought the prince’s wedding
candles to light before his saint, my angel,”
she said with a sigh.
“Oh, nurse, I’m so glad!”
“God is merciful, birdie.”
The nurse lit the gilt candles before
the icons and sat down by the door with her knitting.
Princess Mary took a book and began reading.
Only when footsteps or voices were heard did they look
at one another, the princess anxious and inquiring,
the nurse encouraging. Everyone in the house
was dominated by the same feeling that Princess Mary
experienced as she sat in her room. But owing
to the superstition that the fewer the people who
know of it the less a woman in travail suffers, everyone
tried to pretend not to know; no one spoke of it,
but apart from the ordinary staid and respectful good
manners habitual in the prince’s household, a
common anxiety, a softening of the heart, and a consciousness
that something great and mysterious was being accomplished
at that moment made itself felt.
There was no laughter in the maids’
large hall. In the men servants’ hall all
sat waiting, silently and alert. In the outlying
serfs’ quarters torches and candles were burning
and no one slept. The old prince, stepping on
his heels, paced up and down his study and sent Tikhon
to ask Mary Bogdanovna what news.—“Say
only that ’the prince told me to ask,’
and come and tell me her answer.”
“Inform the prince that labor
has begun,” said Mary Bogdanovna, giving the
messenger a significant look.
Tikhon went and told the prince.
“Very good!” said the
prince closing the door behind him, and Tikhon did
not hear the slightest sound from the study after that.
After a while he re-entered it as
if to snuff the candles, and, seeing the prince was
lying on the sofa, looked at him, noticed his perturbed
face, shook his head, and going up to him silently
kissed him on the shoulder and left the room without
snuffing the candles or saying why he had entered.
The most solemn mystery in the world continued its
course. Evening passed, night came, and the feeling
of suspense and softening of heart in the presence
of the unfathomable did not lessen but increased.
No one slept.
It was one of those March nights when
winter seems to wish to resume its sway and scatters
its last snows and storms with desperate fury.
A relay of horses had been sent up the highroad to
meet the German doctor from Moscow who was expected
every moment, and men on horseback with lanterns were
sent to the crossroads to guide him over the country
road with its hollows and snow-covered pools of water.
Princess Mary had long since put aside
her book: she sat silent, her luminous eyes fixed
on her nurse’s wrinkled face (every line of
which she knew so well), on the lock of gray hair that
escaped from under the kerchief, and the loose skin
that hung under her chin.
Nurse Savishna, knitting in hand,
was telling in low tones, scarcely hearing or understanding
her own words, what she had told hundreds of times
before: how the late princess had given birth
to Princess Mary in Kishenev with only a Moldavian
peasant woman to help instead of a midwife.
“God is merciful, doctors are never needed,”
she said.
Suddenly a gust of wind beat violently
against the casement of the window, from which the
double frame had been removed (by order of the prince,
one window frame was removed in each room as soon as
the larks returned), and, forcing open a loosely closed
latch, set the damask curtain flapping and blew out
the candle with its chill, snowy draft. Princess
Mary shuddered; her nurse, putting down the stocking
she was knitting, went to the window and leaning out
tried to catch the open casement. The cold wind
flapped the ends of her kerchief and her loose locks
of gray hair.
“Princess, my dear, there’s
someone driving up the avenue!” she said, holding
the casement and not closing it. “With lanterns.
Most likely the doctor.”
“Oh, my God! thank God!”
said Princess Mary. “I must go and meet
him, he does not know Russian.”
Princess Mary threw a shawl over her
head and ran to meet the newcomer. As she was
crossing the anteroom she saw through the window a
carriage with lanterns, standing at the entrance.
She went out on the stairs. On a banister post
stood a tallow candle which guttered in the draft.
On the landing below, Philip, the footman, stood looking
scared and holding another candle. Still lower,
beyond the turn of the staircase, one could hear the
footstep of someone in thick felt boots, and a voice
that seemed familiar to Princess Mary was saying something.
“Thank God!” said the voice. “And
Father?”
“Gone to bed,” replied
the voice of Demyan the house steward, who was downstairs.
Then the voice said something more,
Demyan replied, and the steps in the felt boots approached
the unseen bend of the staircase more rapidly.
“It’s Andrew!” thought
Princess Mary. “No it can’t be, that
would be too extraordinary,” and at the very
moment she thought this, the face and figure of Prince
Andrew, in a fur cloak the deep collar of which covered
with snow, appeared on the landing where the footman
stood with the candle. Yes, it was he, pale, thin,
with a changed and strangely softened but agitated
expression on his face. He came up the stairs
and embraced his sister.
“You did not get my letter?”
he asked, and not waiting for a reply—which
he would not have received, for the princess was unable
to speak—he turned back, rapidly mounted
the stairs again with the doctor who had entered the
hall after him (they had met at the last post station),
and again embraced his sister.
“What a strange fate, Masha
darling!” And having taken off his cloak and
felt boots, he went to the little princess’ apartment.